![]() If you have questions about Sketchpad for Education please email and we’d love to chat □ The free download offer has been discontinued. Click the button below and fill out the form to receive your download link. Starting immediately we’re offering our downloadable version of Sketchpad for free to all teachers, students, and educators. We’re focused on improving integration with Google Classroom so teachers can easily create assignments and students can directly submit their work from Sketchpad. Rest assured we’re here to continue keeping Sketchpad running smoothly and available for everyone. We love hearing how you’re doing and always do our best to reply as soon as possible.Īs we face uncertainty the Sketchpad team wishes everyone safety and wellbeing. Reach out to us anytime by emailing with your thoughts, questions, and suggestions about Sketchpad. If you missed it in our last newsletter, we’re offering our downloadable version of Sketchpad for free to all teachers, students, and educators.Ĭlick the button below and fill out the form to receive your download link. This month we’re talking about the Web Brush! Have you had a chance to use it yet? Give it a shot, depending on the flow and angle the web-y-ness changes. In this newsletter, we will spotlight a unique feature available on Sketchpad to help expand and inspire your creativity. Please note that by submitting your work to us, you agree to it being posted and shared on social media. We’d love to share them with our community to show all the ways Sketchpad can be used. This month we wanted to ask for beautiful sketchpad art that you or your students have done. We hope you are all doing well and finding Sketchpad to be a great resource for yourself, your students, or artistic talents. Keep them coming and we’ll send you a personal reply as soon we can! April 2020 Newsletter We love hearing how you’re doing and we’ve expanded our team to reply to the abundance of messages we’ve been receiving. Remember to reach out to us anytime by emailing with your thoughts, questions, and suggestions about Sketchpad. Sketchpad 2020 includes many upgrades like better group support, Google Classroom integration, and an improved User Guide with example lesson plans and videos! We’ll be inviting users to participate in our open beta test of Sketchpad 2020 this summer so keep an eye out for an email invitation soon. Get ready because Sketchpad 2020 is almost ready to be released. ![]() This month we’re talking about the Fur Brush! It’s friendly and furry, so give it a shot on your next design. Like last month, we will spotlight a unique feature available on Sketchpad to help expand and inspire your creativity. ![]() We will contact you before posting your work and we will provide you with credit in the form of a hashtag, website link back, and/or social media username mention. * Please note that by submitting your work to us, you agree to it being shared on social media. We’d love to share your creations with our community to show all the ways Sketchpad can be used. Want to submit the artwork you’ve made on Sketchpad? Recently we’ve been posting more content on our Facebook page so check it out if you get a chance □Ĭheck out our Facebook Artwork Submission The proceedings for the 1968 Fall Joint Computer Conference paint the picture of computing at its pivot from arcane to mainstream, growing into greater interactivity.Hello again! We’re happy to be sending out our May newsletter with many updates coming your way. Here’s what his ‘Sword of Damocles’ looked like in operation: Read the PDF: Licklider – Man-Computer SymbiosisĪ video from Lincoln Labs, demonstrating some of the features of Ivan Sutherland’s SKETCHPAD, the first program that allowed you to draw to a computer display of an interactive computer, the TX-2:Īnd here’s the PDF of his 1965 paper: Sutherland – The Ultimate Displayīy 1968, Sutherland was ready to show his ultimate display at the Fall Joint Computing Conference in San Francisco. ![]() JCR Licklider‘s 1960 paper “Man-Computer Symbiosis” touched off a new wave of thinking of the computer as aid and amplifier of human capacity. Five years later he followed that up with his ‘ultimate display’ – inventing virtual and augmented reality with a device nicknamed the SWORD OF DAMOCLES. Ivan Sutherland – the Albert Einstein of interactivity – created SKETCHPAD, the first application that let users ‘draw’ onto a computer display. ![]()
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